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About Bohemia nugget. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1899-1907 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1900)
BOHEMIA NUGGE' rublUbcd Ktit rrlIr. COTTAOK GIIOVK OREGON I WR OF IE WEEK Conipnhrnilv Itaylcw of Ihn Import unt llniinrnlne' of tho lnst Week Culleil From tha Teloginiih Columns LAI tR NEWS. TIcn Tsin is hard pressed by 80,000 Chlnoso. CONVENTION ofCAtrr&:,'ntthOW,llH,rft"1 Bryan Unanimously Nomin- ated for President. President Kruger ia reported to havo moved to olspruit. Eight doaths from extreme boat aro reported from Chicago. In a wild plungo of a street-car into gulch at Tacoina, 30 people worr Jcillod and 00 injured. Elizabeth Chapman, a Salom pioneer of 1848, died at that city in.-hor 81st year, of a complication of diseases An explosion of flrowoiks in Phlla dolphin cnusod tho death of four chil dren and the fatal injury of thieo oth ers. Hy tho explosion of an oil tank in Parkcrsbnrg, W. Vn., six men were blown to atoms and three others fatally Injured. Throo men were killed; one wound ed in a wreck on the Delaware, Lacka wanna & Western road at Durkin's Cut, near Ilenryville, Pa. Southern provinces of China are drifting away from the empire. Li Hung Chans auil tho friendly viceroys nru engineering tho movomont. Tho foreigner in Pekin will be left to their fate. Tho allies cannot rescue them on account of the overwhelming force of Chinese that oppose them. The United States bnttlo-ship Ore con, which ran ashoro off tho island of ilow Ke, ia tho Miutau group, 35 miles northeast of Che Foo, on Jnue 28, has been floated. Tho steamer DirIgounived at Seat tlo from Skagway, bringing 10 boxes of gold dust, valued at nearly $800,000. The Dirigo carried 72 passengers, mostly from Dawson. Rear-Admiml Bare, now command ant of the Norfolk navy yard, has been selected to Eucceed Kear-Admiral Philip, deceased, as commandant of the .New York navy yard. Charles V. Dickinson, inventor of the geometry O lathe, which made a fiuccessfnl counterfeiting of bank notes impossible, is dead at his homo in Jielleville, N. J., aged 77 years. June 30 the grand staff of the Rus sian army estimated the Chinese army to number 1,720,000 men. Ho also said that about 900,000 Mansers have been imported within the last three years. A dispatch from Bombay says that in all except three districts cholera is raging in Bombay presidency, the cases reported for the week ending June 20 numbering 20,689, and the deaths, 12,' B33. Twenty thousand Chinese solders are within Pekin walls, 30,000 outside. Admiral Kempff reports that the Ore - gon is not in a dangerous position. The German minister at Pekin has been killed and other legations are un der seige and starving. The cruiser I'hiladelphia arrived at Astoria to takp part in the Fourth of Jnly celebration there. The steamer Danube ai rived at Na naimo, B. C, five days from Skagway, with 40 passengers and $70,000 in gold dust. As a last hope of saving foreigners in Pekin, tho powers may now threaten to destroy the graves of the imperial Ancestors. Fire destroyed the large soap and fertilizing plant of the Walker-Strut-man Company at Pittsburg, causing a loss of $75,000. A scandal in Klondike. Gold Com missioner Senklor is charged with il legal grants to persons with whom be was partner. Lou Cramer, of Independence, Or., a pioneer of 1852, committed suicide by hanging himself. No cause is known for the deed. The four-oared race between Penn sylvania, Columbia and Cornell crews was won by the former. Tho raoe took place at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. At Chester park, Cincinnati, W.' A. Rntz aud F. Iluusman, of New Haven, Conn., on a motor tandem, made a mile in 1:20 4-5. This gives them the world's record for a cement track. By the bursting of a reservoir of the city water works of Grand Rapids, Mich., 100,000,000 gallons of water was precipitated upon a thickly popu lated district of the city, doing dam age estimated at hundreds of thousands of dollars. The strength of the foreign forces at present in China are as follows: Ger many, 44 officers and 1,400 men; Great Britain, 184 olibers and 1,700 men; C Austria, 12 ollicers and 127 men; iuAmerica, 20 ollicers and 320 men; iuFranco, 17 officers and 387 men; Italy, Uneven officers and 131 men; Japan, 119 jtofllcors and 8,709 men, and Russia, 117 officers and 5,817 men, with a total of 63 Hold guns and 30 machiue guns. are Germans naturalized In America In disfavor in the fatherlund. The wall papor trust, one of the earliest and best known of the com binations, has asked for a recoiver. Siuce January 1 174 national banks have been organized. On Juno 9 lhero wore 3,754 national banks in tho coun try. Carleton college at Northfleld, Minn., baa received $35,000 from Dr. D, K. Jearsons, of Chicago. St. Louis street car employes havo reuowod their strike. Chinoso imperial troons aro defend ing tho foreigners in Pekin. Chluoso do not want religion and no j amount of war can ihbko tnom accept it. Brtttlcstitp Oregon will not Ih sent to Taku again nnlosa absolutely neces sary. It is said America ia to have 11,000 mon in tho force of 100,000 to bjj uboiI in China. Tho stoamor Rosalie arrived at Seat tle from Lynn canal, with $000,000 in Klondike gold. American trado will be injured if the powers decide to make war on the Chinese empire. The Oregon must remain in dry dock 90 days. Slio has arrived at Cho too and will go to Japan at once. Li Hung Chang is again urging tho powers to intervene and estaunsn a strong government in tho Chinese empire. George Horrick, is hold at North Ya kima on a chargo ot killing a squaw on the reservation. Ho claims solf-de fense. Ruraoi is current that the Chicago & Alton, Kansas City Southern and Un ion Pacific railways will bo amnlga mated. Dr. Henry D. Cogswell, a well known philanthropist aud prohibition ist, is dead at Sun traucisco, aged 80 yeaiB. Commissioner of Patents Duoll is said to bo out for the nomination for governor of Now York on the Kopub' lican ticket. Japanese laborers in Hawaii are dis contented. Plantation managers have conceeded everything asked for and still tliov are not satisfied. Tho converter and billet mill of the Illinois Steel Company at Joliet, 111., resumed operations and nearly 1,000 men were put to work. Russian, French and German admi rals at Tien Tsin are said to have ex pressed themselves as unfavorable to Japan's being given a free hand. Roy C. Gage, of Company C, Third regiment, O. N. G., in their annual encampment at Salem, was drowned in tho Wjllamette river while bathing, Many prostrations from heat in New York city. Two more British warships have been ordered to China. A Franco-American alliance is pro posed by an enthusiastic Frenchman. Fire in tho business section of Pitts bnrg caused the death of four persons and injury to six others. Fho in the Cramp's shipbuilding yard near Philadelpha, destroyed prop erty to the value of $200,000. Nine deaths in one day in Chicago from extreme heat. The record for a week is 27 deaths and 90 prostrations. The total number of bodies recovered from the recent Hoboken fire now number 143, and 140 persons are re ported missing. A cyclone, accompanied by a clond burst and hail storm, swept over Kala mazoo, Mich., resulting in damage to property of $100,000. On June 17, the Chicago & North western railway opened for traffic thoir new line from Belle l'laino, la., to Ma son City; nUo their new Fox lake branch. Tho length of this new line is 195 miles, which added to their milo age .gives them a total of 8,402.85 miles, the largost mileage of any rail' road in the world. The dock laborers' strike at Rotter dam, Germany, is assuming threaten ing proportions. Tho carmen have now joined in the striko, and the police and marines aro guarding the streots in order to cheek disturbances. The strikers have picketed all the ap proachos to tho town, so as to prevent non-unionists from entering. Tho la borers of Rotterdam will hold a mass metting to discuss the best mean oi aiding the strikers. The ordors recently issued for tho re moval of a large number of troops fro-n Cuba have been gladly welcomed by the Cubans, and General Wood is in receipt of many letters from various municipalities offering thanks for what they call his disposition to trust the Cubans, and declaring that the entire island is in a state ot absolute tran quillity. The Tenth infantry, it is be lieved, will leave the island shortly af ter the departure of the regiments now under orders to proceed home. James W. Porter, of Chicago, has re ceived u cablegram from Che Foo, an nouncing that bis brother, tho Rev. Heurv J. Porter, and his sister, Mi si Mary II. Porter, missionaries of the American board of commissioners for foreign missions, stationed at Pang Chuang, 200 miles south of Tien Tsin, had arrived safely at Che Foo, July 5, coming overland from Chiuan Fu, cap ital of the province. They were accom panied by the Rev. II. I'. Porkins, an other missionary stationed at Pang Chuang. ON FREE COINAGE PLATFORM ..... twi. Rirrlr Arraigns tlt ltrpu,hllf I'urtj for tck of Hym p.lhr for Ilia llor Kansas Citr. July 0. William J. Bryan, of Nebraska, was tonight unanimously placed in nomination as the Democratic candidate for prosldont of the United States, on a platform op-oosiun- lnmerialism. militarism nud trusts, and siccifioally declaring for tho freo ooiuiigo of silver at the ratio oi iu to 1. The nomination camoas tho culmina tion of a frenzlod demonstration in honor of tho patty leader, lasting 37 minutes, and giving utterance to all tho pent-up cmotious of the vast mul titude. It followed also a llerco strug gle throughout tho last 30 houra con cerning tho platform declaration on silver and on tho relative position which tho silver question is to main tain to tho other great issues of tho day. It was late this afternoon when tho convention was at last face to faco with the presidential nomination. Karly in the day there had been tedious do lays, duo to the inability of tho plat form committeo to rocoucile their dif- W J Bryan An ordinary sight in Manila ia s Fll pino market or washerwoman smok ing a large cigar and clothed in n low necked gown, with (lowing sleeves and a handsomely embroideried silk scarf. Partiok Sharkey, who died at the age of 83 in East Cambridge, Mass., was the last survivor of the four organizers of the Father Mathew Temperenco so ciety, the oldest association of its kind among tlio laity pf the Roman Catholic church. ferences and present a report. Until this was ready the convention mauagers beguilod tho time by putting forward speakers of moro or less promineiico to keep tho vast uudiemo from becoming too restless. The first session, beginning at 10 o'clock this morning, was entirely fruitless of resnlts and it was not un til late in the afternoon, when tho sec ond session had begun, that the plat form committee was at last able to re port an agreement. Already its main features, embodying tho 10 to 1 princi pie, had become known to the dole gates, and there was little delay in giving it unanimous approval. Tin removed tho lust chance for an open rupture on questions of principlo and ieiK ino way clear lor the supromo event oi the day the nomination of tha presidential candidate. The vast auditorium was filled to it utmost capacity when the moment ur rived for tho nomination to be made Not only were the usual facilities af forded by tickets taxed to tho utmost but the doorkeejierx were given liberal instructions, under which the aisles and areas aud all available spaces were packed to thoir fullest limit. When the call of states began for tlio purpose of placing candidates in nomination Alabama yielded its place at the head of the list to Nebraska, and Oldham, of that Btate, made his way to tho plat form for the initial speech, placing Mr, Bryan in nomination lor the presi denoy. The orator was strong-voicod and entertaining, yet to tho waiting delegates and spectators there was but one point to his speech, and that was the Btirring peroration which closed with tho name of William J. Bryan. This was the signal for tho demon stration of the day, and with a com mon purpose, the great conourso joined in a tribute of enthusiastic devotion to tho party leader. All of tho intensity ot former ilemonBtratious and much more was added to this final tributo to tho leader. When the demonstration had spent itseit, tne speeches eoconding the noini nation ot Mr. Bryan were in order. Then came tho voting. State after state recorded its vote in behalf of the Nebraska candidate, giving him tho unanimous vote of all the states and territories. The convention managers ... . .... " nau already agrood that this wus sufn cient work for tho day, and the vice presidential nomination was allowed to go ovor until tomorrow. Next to the demonstration for the party candidate, tho greeting of the announcement-that imperialism was to bo tne paramount issue of this cam paign was the most spontaneous ami uguuicaui oi mo (lay. Another stlrriug event of the dor wus hio appearance oi Webster Davis ex-assistant secretary of the interior under iioKiniey's administration, in a speech severely arraigning tho Kopub Mean party for its lack of sympathy for mo nuoru nu luriuany announcing his allegiance to tho Democratic party. Victim of llolmkflii Fire. New York. July 5. Un toil n,.inni. last night 120 bodies had been rocov ered from tho wafers of tho North river. There are yet over l'lnni. missing. DEMOCRATIC PLATFOfiM Imperial!"" Ill Tar- A large electric light nlant win k- put in at the Cornucopia mines i. Union county, Or. Tho waters of Hue creek will be utilized to onr,i .u machinery. Work on the Niimu ulll begin immediately. Aiiiiniitirril hi niiiiiiil Issll Kansas City. July 1 11 , v f , ? the ollielal text of the platform a. Teed pon by .ho committee on reso lution ml l-rcsontod to tho cuveu- l,,Vo. the representative of the lenio. crntlo p rtyof tho United '. semhled in national eomontlon on t o anniversary of tho adoption of the t o laration ol Independence, do roalllim our faith in that immortal proclama tion of tho inalienable rights of An.crl. cms aud our allegiance to tho .nstttu tion framed in harmony therewith by tho fathers of tho republic. Wo hold with the United States mi promo court that the Declaration of Independence is tho spirit of ir Kv eminent, of which the constitution l tho form and letter. We declare again that all governments Instituted among men derive their Just jHiwer from the consent of tho governed; that any gov ernment not based upon the consent uf tho governed iH tyranny; anil that to impose upon any people a government of force is to substitute the methods of imperialism for those of the republic. Relieving in these fundamental prin ciples, wo denounce the I'uorto Rlcati law enacted by a Republican emigrci. against tho piotest and opKltlon of tho Democratic minority, as a bold and open violation of the nation's organic law aud flagrant breach of the na tional good faith. Wo condemn aud denonnco tho Phil-, ippiuo policy of tho piosont administra tion. It has embroiled tho republic In an unnecoHcary war, sacrificed the llvos of many of Its noblest sonj and placed tho Uuttod States, previously known and applauded throughout the world as tho champion ol freedom, In tho falso and un-American position oi crushing with military force the efforts of our former allies to achieve liberty and self-government. Wo oppose militarism. It means conquest abroad and intimidation and oppiessiou at homo. It means 1 1 1 strong arm which has ever been fatal to freo institutions1. Wo pledge tho Democratic party to an unceasing warfare in nation, state aud city against private monooly iu every form. Existing laws against trusts must bo eufurccd ami moru stringent ones must be cuueted provid ing fur publicity as to tho affairs of corporations engaged in interstate com merce ami requiring all corporation to show, before doing buslueivH outside of tho statu of their origin, that they have no watar in their stock and that they havo not attempted and are not attempting to moimiKdizo any Inisine.- or tho production of any arliclei of merchandise. We condemn the Dingley taiiff law us a trust breeding measure. i Wo reatlirm and endorse tho princi ples of tho national Democratic plat form adopted at Chicago iu 1 Slid, and wo reiterate tho demand of that plat form for an American financial plat form adopted byjjthe American eoplo for themselves which shall rextoru and maintain a bimetallic price level, aud lie. Stroot Car Mon or St. Louis Gc Out Agftin. SAY COMPANY UIIOKE FAITH Tlii HojenH WW ItfXttnril, Tliiri Will N l.nwli"""!" l),iii,,ii.ltiill"in of VluUnen. Hill Nor tuof lliu. M. I.OU1, wuiy ii. -" i. iraving the W11.11..1 '"til WEIRD !- HI "6 "run . . . "' Hull., k. Han Krm..w,, Jul: , V"' ""i " IX.lpl.ln. wh, , ti ;pW wJ were discovert " W ""Floy yi,,r f ll))lnU '"'. ii i i i " l"" "l'tlu i ' M la i ."" Ktl ...... inu-u, no 11.. u. I ...ii. 'I'r..i!.t I ?ti!iiimni i.fct.1 . . gaum mo r. iiiin , , , ' I ""PUI.II tint (,,..., by its former t'Uipioytif. which n m. .ways wn a notorious l,.j,u'i. oUrvd off JuljrJ!. a orderud nwAllral other was H i,Mo ' V t,Wu "Mom ti,. tLr I t,;...,Sb'," .1. I.-...I .-.li ' - . . Mihin. WaVlllMALyrvuc, Ml inn n uu 11m t m iirm MIOWHrd, llmtiin-l , r" M.t attliudii imf, ...I nta Hi .. ...I.... n n'l.liiMr SOU!!.. 'IPUiorrun iikmiiihk was the ttm fixed for tho recall of the itoyeyott mi all the emupniiv' III.""- When Ihn ntrlko wan settled July 3, there were Mime muttering of dlnoon tent among the men ovor tho tonus, of M.itlenient. aud so it N tho dlHsatlnfac tlmi has grown dally. Tho men main tain ihi.t Ihn iMinipiiiiy has failed to keep the agreement and a iloii or mure instances with cited tending to prove that there hail been a broach of faith. MeellugH were held at hovithI place. In the ii.i.rsu of the week, anil cummltteeH were appointed to iiroc.ro proof of Infidelity on tho fart of tho company. At a meeting of tho executive com mittee of ihn Street Kallwiiyiuen'H Un ion held Monday, a batch of allldavlln was presented to the effect that men had liet-n employed by tho company since July 'J In violation ol tho terms of tho nt!reenietit ofy that date. At a moduli lusting several hours, the cum mlltee called a mat meeting of tho men fr this morning to recommend at that meeting that tho strike lie declared on again. The Central Trades and In bor Union met later aud Indorsed tho action of tin) executive eomtiilttoo. The company, through 1'rimldont Whltiiker. addressed a letter to the nun, .Inning that tho c puny hud InteiiftiiUHlly violated the agreement of July 2. and 'declaring It Intention to lle up to every condition of tlio agree ment, hot!, in letter and spirit. Fred W. Lehman, attorney lor tlio company, npMiircd at the meeting and offornd to Hiibiiilt the oiiiMliou ax to whether tho coiniMihv has broken faith to Joseph W I ell., counsel or tho men, and humid the ecuiipHiiy to abide by Mr Kulk's judgment In the premises. Tho liniiKMitlou wit Ignored, nidi by a unanimous ote the strike was re newed. A member of the executive commit tee today said that this was tho second limn the company had broken faith I with its. employes, and no agreement I would be accepted in the future that , did not provide for the reinstatement of all old employe In SI hour after the execution of the agieement. ''There will be no limlesttnem or .demonstrations of violence tl.ii time." .McAllister with u clwir .nl ? J?! l-nii upon. ho i-ontinuod. "By means of a vigor- i . ... . i . . i as part of such system tho immediate . " " o no,, restoration of tho free and unlimited '""'" to destroy the earning cajmc coinage of silver and gold at tho pros- I "r, u,u, '"Iny ' em legal ratio of 10 to 1, without wait-1 ,,,u whole troublo seems to hung ing for the aid or consent of any other i """ " ,ow "r , ,l,u l'"k' it uation. j agreement, while the company, on tho Wo favor an amendment to the fed- j otl",!r '""I'1' 'nphatlcally denies that eral constitution providing forthoetcc-i nch Is tho esse. Tho men claimed tion of Untied Ktates senators by direct , y'1' ,"nt v'bi "ureeinent was vote of tho oeonle. nd favor .lir..ot i '"tiiied Into concurrently with the legislation wherever practicable. Wo are opposed to government by in junction; we denounce tho bbicklint ' and favor arbitration us a ineann of set tling disputes between corjMjration) and tlieir employes. Wo favor tho immedlato construc tion, ownersnip and control of tho Nicaragua canal by tho United Htatos. We favor an intelligent systom of Improving the ai id lands of tho West, storing tho waters for purposes of irri gation and the holding of such lands for actual settlers. Wo favor tho continuance and strict enforcement of tho Chinese exclusion law, and its application to tho same classes of all Asiatic races. Speaking, as wo believe, for tho en tire American nation, except its Re publican oflico holders, and for all free men ovory where, wo extond our sym pathies to the heroic Boors in their un equnl struggle, to maintain thoir liborty and independence. Relioving that our most ohorlsliefl institutions aro in great eril, that tlm very oxlstenco of our constitutional republic is ut stako, and that tho decis ion now to bo rendered will dotermina whothor or not our children will enjoy these blessed privileges of freo govern ment which havo mado the United States great, prosperous and honored, we earnestly ask for tho foregoing dec- laration of principles the heartv sun. port of liberty-lovinii American nonl rogardless of previous party affiliations. written agreement aud under the ver bal agreement the company had agreed to re-employ nil tlm old' men In (10 days, onloritv in the services deter mining the priority of re-employment. It was claimed that tho liov. Dr. W. J. Boise instructed the men that such an agreement existed, in a speech at the West 12nd coliseum. The olllcem f the company declare that there was uo such verbal understanding and that tho only agreement mado by them was tho written agreement, "which was published at tho tlmo. WEEK'S WORK IN LUZON. The Ticket Flllo.l. Kansaa City. July 7 Th Demo- Klrn Aiiirrlrmii Wnrn Klllril n,l Nlxtnrii Wiiiuiitcil. Manila. July 11, The past week's scouting in Luzon resulted iu 11 Amer icans lielng killed and 10 wouudod. One hundred and sixty Filipinos wero kiiiuii miring mo week and eight Am erirans who had been prisoners iu the JmielM of tho rebels Were surrendered and 100 rilles worn turned ovor to tho Tl.il.wl .'... ut .1. w. ...,, r-iiunn uiiiciaiH, -t He enemy nilliMianrii wnglJH trUlll DOtWCOn 1 11(1 nog aim iaio. The Third infantry uni mini iiihii wimp on un expedition oi pnuisn tne i,iuirouex In the delta of wie mo tiranilo In tho Antigua, province of Panay, u running light of three hours' duration resulted iu the killing and wounding of i-. in mu enemy, mere were no can ualties among tho Americans. i no insurgents aro slowly aocoptlug mo nuiueuiy provisions, in some In- stances American are suHjieiidlng opor I...T-V .. .. ...v un ,,v - Pi ranoy Hook. Tlircs ,7.7 " M Ht. Imeia he attacked . s ',,0,,Si The .!....: m a irons and ('atiliili. run Wll hl.gll.eer Winter took , x .'Zl "Hlroimin'H !,,,, JJ then beeaino frlemllr i, l .V"l crow and they wrk( onl, .tf they pleased. r M Captain ci 'Une,, mmM w stimard and tin, n.ni... . r't hut thnUn,,,.,, s,,a,,r;ft7H wsrii llllllliug I,,,.,,, milM isirt was roacliixi ti. ... released from , , , JJJ painting and ieiiing ,,' Sjj Ing this trouble n.e i,,ci " tendoucy to rue ,h, "i "'" " " crew. bnt r.l O'Brien and hi. ers In plain Me-vamlt,,,!,.,.,! readiness to use them prcvtutejl ui,,l ill M.. ...... .1. " 'I "1, " """'"I "I COIlIu, HllllUlf Ollt In illii-M ..... I. .i ' I.I .. . I ' ufc i huh', ii iiiirrn-iiiMi swept IIOWD M! Dolphin, and she imrronly mc1iji lug wrecked. n In tho Straits oi MbrcIUd tk,hl i-iiiWK riiiviiiis ililentit((l told hi ..... . .in-, ,n .if..,. . before to a Unl.-an inaii-ol.wir,! nun villlllK me i-iiilr(i cri'W. At ClS i.el, a Chlliiiti .luling I., ttu iwsseis i.lilaiiii' l li-timruiiilnettnl warpain ami - uiiii not It nH,l lhey smasheil nil ni lire iSMkl anil tiinnteiieil t. kill ccrrci sleiimor. During tlm trottble.fp llumin and Sen. nil l'nglnctr0r Carnill were sent nihoru by tqi O'llrien In proi-ure iisslrUuco i!t lost no time in luuiing the mtaiii thority. llle nearest Iroou ) inilex away. Imt a s-1il tiiitl sent after them 1 1 mo gmfrniSMt iiuvoiupuu nun muciip iirsiuml.rl no better on shore tlmn the U! A on the Dtdphlu. for in mi cot t!i way place ii u usulcs to nulii tempts lo get back to tlmibip. "When we got dark Iptbtittu:! said Purser Humes, "the tnttifw i the crew up in the ringing isiinl full iKissusslon of the m!. Imi iliers hail a ipiietlug rffect oo tail groes. 1 he striking llrerara en ushoro in irons una oeit au court of lmpirly wan Mi ai Dolphin. The court ciiteiic di ringleaders to three months tidbj catalxKxe. In the crowd eu steward ami tho three itowswiti! Ht. Lucia. You can bet tn Wl time gettliu out of CoroDtlii t sentence had been iwed. I licit want to see mv wont cufj nrlMii; ill (!imiiii'I It II &H place where only leprosy J 4 teem to thrive. " I Tlm Doliihln is on her wT K M lie, whero she will go Into tin 1VJ trade. MORE BODIES FOUND. A IoIhI m1 cratlo national Hr.kt I...... Un....u i. ... ... . 7. . V inA,lv i,v , i7 .I ""."'""I'""'"" give mo rouois an op iiiuiiiiy m tauu advantaire of tlm iwcree. iouay oy tne noiuimition of Adlai K DveveuKin lor Vlce-nresldonr. Tlm nomination was mado on the first bal lot, stuto aftor state joining in tho wild soramblo to record thoir himhwi ni winning candiduto. It was not ac companied by any such frantlo demon titration of approval as had mart,,.,! i. proceedings at previous stages. Hlphto, Wouia-be-AssBssln. Ilrnssels, July 0 Tlm nu.w.. . today returned a verdict of guilty of at tempt to kill the I'rln i w..i.... against Jean llantlstn rim flrod at the pilnco in this city, April 14. The court consldfimri ti..t uii.i noted without discern tencod him to n rnfnT..,.!. ... . shall have attained iiiV 1 1 V,,M because of tho lark of na Meert, Penohot. and M i" ".W I xrHI,uKe I . - . -wU lltO 4H I A general movement of lloer settlors in Oazaland,, rortuguoso territory Heem to bo in eniitotiiplatlon. Largo herds havo been driven ucross tho border. The I'ortuguoso wolcomo tho niovemeiit, HxiMHlliinnl Pninr Bilspniiil., Chicago, .Inly 11. Tho Chicago Democrat (tho Chicago Dispatch), an afternoon newspaper, founded m 180U, mispended publication of its daily edi tion today. It will bo continued as a ookly. NHti,lin KlBoulox-tl, publisher of the paper, slates that the discontin- 141) Itrcom.'l llolinkm Klrr. Now York, July 10. TbrM bodies woro found today on III tH This makes ai lodles that M far been taken from the Saalu sluco tho (Ire, and US k ..ii ....,..,i Tlm km ei rw today wero found i" the I.. II... i.t..r .irt of tllOflllP. wore horrlblo sights to 1U They had very little olotlilog OV weniHll victims of fire. Wr not bo Idontilled. . Chief Olllcer Homy N" wiih In chargo today, said M ft idea who tho men had ken, MW ing from tho place whew W , found, ho thinks they w)"' Tho bo.1 of a man burned was found nt '0C'tJ thin aftmnoon and taken lotMW that of u victim of the HoiKn . . V Ml v Bhier. uyuuiiiim -" -- .ltufi river bod alwut tho wc".0 ,si3 nl tho North German Uoi l 1 without bringing to the ' moro bodloi. , Anlh.r Vriissusi" . ja lltirrcitmi. .Tilllllllofl, Jv .' ,'ufl Gorsira, the Venezuelan v Colombia, airivodhera je-, his way to Curacas, to rj" government specifleally on blau situation. He B. lution ia impondlng w l..ln.l Ii Dr. Potrio. r.t bio dispatch rocuivod here j i.k .tnrviitlon practlcai'J J robel gcnoral was recently tho oapltul of Colombia. ' -,lr. YernoD, Tex., wa y- Kilward Urower, I - 7ll!rf woro shoe ami "ar ,U.. insfil horo br N. K. Norris. i j currod over business wus nrrestoo. , The consuls at BhangM'KJl the Pekin legations 4, una iiw fear tlieir nttacKS. t)ll erm cording to tho reports oi wa. rcBardlug thoM""7